The latest update to Amazon's Kindle Fire raises the price of the tablet up from that lovely sounding $200 figure to a starting price of $229 — although that number can go as high as $479 — making it the cheap tablet no more.

We have been covering people's frustrations with Apple's iOS 7, but is it the most frustrating iOS update ever? No, at least not according to Google searches, which suggest iOS 5 sent more people searching for glitch fixes than this year's upgrade.

The psychology of iPhone buying is such that people will want the gold iPhone and Apple knows that, which is why it's no surprise that the iPhone's newest color is already in short supply after less than a day of sales.

Kate Losse, the author of last year's Boy Kings, which outlined the early culture at Facebook from her experiences as employee 51, has accused Dave Eggers of stealing her book idea for his forthcoming novel The Circle.

BlackBerry's planning on laying off 40 percent of its workforce — or somewhere around 5,000 employees — the second big layoff in two years, which, unfortunately, matches the general downward trajectory of the beleaguered smartphone maker.

As users have become both more aware and wary of cookies — the technology that tracks browsing activity for advertising purposes — Google has started experimenting with new tracking methods that don't use cookies.

After a brief period of censorship-free Internet in Iran, the Iranian government has clarified that yesterday's Facebook and Twitter access was not new freedoms of speech being provided by the new regime, but just a glitch.